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Posted

I got some plastic mallets I've bought from Lowe's and Freight I've been using to tool with. But I'm wandering if a leather working maul would work better or if would make a difference in the crispness of the impressions.

 

Posted

The mallets you got are probably pretty bouncy I would think. Personally I really like mauls. They take a bit of getting use to at first but for tooling I dont use anything else anymore. Either one maul or mallet needs to be the right material and it will make a world of difference. 

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Posted (edited)

For tooling and light punching and rivets - I started with Mallets but only use a maul. I get way better balance, control and more forgiving for when you happen to strike off the line of the tool. But oddly enough are more consistent that way. I believe having the striking face closer to the centre line of the handle and hot having a weighted bit sticking out the opposite side helps greatly.  Much easier on the wrist too.

For heavy punching and rivets I use a #2 (lbs) Thorex Mallet with the hard nylon (white) striking faces (you can get different one such as rubber etc.).

For my makers stamps I use a 1.5 pound Power Fist "dead blow" hammer which gives ZERO bounce. Excellent for makers marks.

Hope this helps.

Edited by plinkercases

"Oh my God....I beseech thee grant me the grace to remain in Thy Presence; and to this end do Thou prosper me with Thy assistance, receive all my works, and possess all my affections" Brother Lawrence c.1614-1691

plinkercases.ca

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Posted

I was using the summer hammers you describe. Bought a nice leather working maul, and I would never go back. Mails are the way to go for leather working, in my opinion. 

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Posted

The mauls I see on Tandy's website are between $80 & $100. So it was hard for me to justify paying that when I could buy a mallet for $20 or less at Harbor Freight or Lowe's. Cause at first I didn't think there would be a big difference long as it wouldn't a metal hammer. But in using cams and pear shaders now I'm really wandering if it makes a difference as the cams are hardly defined. Pear shaders seem to be muddled.

 

Posted

You can get a bear man maul for the price of those tandy things. Much nicer and will last ya a good long while. Up to you though how you spend your money. Ya think thats bad wait till you start getting nice stamps instead of that craft tool stuff. 

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Posted
5 minutes ago, MADMAX22 said:

You can get a bear man maul for the price of those tandy things. Much nicer and will last ya a good long while. Up to you though how you spend your money. Ya think thats bad wait till you start getting nice stamps instead of that craft tool stuff. 

I've never heard of bear man or even where to get them. Far as stamps I was thinking about those two as all mine are new Tandy stamps. I'd eventually like to get in to the business of leather working. But I keep comparing my work to what I see on here and hadn't figured out how they are getting so much better definition than I am getting 

 

Posted

Look up Bearman on the forums here, think his son is making the mauls now. Think they start somewhere around $70 or so. 

Remember alot of people here have been doing leather work for years and years, some using very nice leather, and very nice tools which arent the answer to good tooling but it helps. Most of it is just experience and lots of good practice and nice leather. 

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Posted
18 minutes ago, MADMAX22 said:

Look up Bearman on the forums here, think his son is making the mauls now. Think they start somewhere around $70 or so. 

Remember alot of people here have been doing leather work for years and years, some using very nice leather, and very nice tools which arent the answer to good tooling but it helps. Most of it is just experience and lots of good practice and nice leather. 

This is an example of what I'm talking about the pear shading on the flower petals you can't really see. I did mess up in cutting on the scroll but I had just bought a Barry King swivel knife and this was 1st time using it versus the Tandy one I have. But what I'm after is better more crisp definition in my stamping. The flowing curves will come with more practice with the swivel knife.

IMG_20160716_162101032.jpg

Posted

I am not the best at critiquing tooling and I know it just takes alot of practice. 

That piece looks fine, the leather looks pretty rough and I am sure is contributing to not taking the stamped image as well for things like the pear shaders. I would keep practicing on that stuff for now trying to finish the pieces so you get the kinks worked out of the whole process then try and get a nice shoulder or side of leather like wickett and craig, hermann oak, RJF leather. Something that will tool so much nicer. 

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